RP1 has observed, IIRC, that ship handling in a quartering sea is vastly better with outriggers that extend all the way aft.
Not quite.
Sidehull size is dictated by the required intact stability.
With this fixed, side hulls just aft of amidships (like Triton) have the best seakeeping*
Side hulls right aft have the lowest resistance at high speed, but poor seakeeping**
If you have to have side hulls aft (for resistance or layout), then it is better to make them longer, so that they extend further forward (like LCS2), this reduces the seakeeping problems. But it increases the wetted surface area, so increasing the resistance at low speed.
So for a ship like this, assuming similar operational profile to T45, an arrangement proportionally similar to Triton or VTs Cerberus would be expected, as a balance between the various operating speeds and conditions. No prizes for guessing what the FSC trimaran looked like (before King Speed came along
)
RP1
* Generally. If they are too large, however, parametric resonance can occur
** Specifically, very poor in stern seas